How baijiu, China’s ‘white spirit’, stopped being uncool thanks to hip cocktail bars that are making it part of a new ‘drinking language’
- China’s national drink, baijiu had fallen out of favour with Chinese youth, but a renaissance is happening, thanks to cool bars that specialise in the spirit
- We talk to a bar owner whose Instagrammable cocktails are making youngsters ‘excited to learn about baijiu’, and look at how the drink’s marketing is evolving
In the 2021 Chengdu International Spirits Competition, Bastien Ciocca – co-founder of award-winning cocktail bars Hope & Sesame and SanYou, in Guangzhou, southern China – was one of two foreigners on the baijiu-tasting panel.
Nobody paid him any attention, not even when he wrote tasting notes that were similar to those penned by the master distiller of Luzhou Laojiao, a baijiu brand that dates back to 1573 during the Ming dynasty.
Heads only turned towards this perceived token foreigner after the audience learned that his bar SanYou, now with a branch in Shenzhen, is one of the few baijiu cocktail bars in the country.
Made mainly with sorghum, baijiu is a distilled spirit that’s fermented in urns or mud vats that may have been around for centuries, contributing to its sought-after vim.